The Triumph Bonneville 400 has been spotted testing on Indian roads again, and each new sighting makes one thing clearer: Bajaj and Triumph are about to take their most direct shot yet at the Royal Enfield Classic 350. This is not another sporty roadster like the Speed 400 but a proper modern classic, with a flat bench seat, twin rear shocks and the teardrop tank that has defined the Bonneville name for decades.
Because the bike is still wearing test camouflage and Triumph has not officially revealed it, almost everything here is based on spy shots and informed expectation rather than confirmed fact. So let us be clear about what we actually know versus what we are reasonably predicting, and then walk through everything to expect from the Triumph Bonneville 400 when it finally breaks cover.
Triumph Bonneville 400: what the spy shots confirm, and what they don’t
The only hard fact today is that the bike exists and is testing. It has been caught on camera multiple times in India, and earlier in Europe, in near production form. Everything else, the name, engine, specifications, features, price and launch date, is still unconfirmed by Triumph and should be treated as expectation.
| Aspect | Status | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| The motorcycle | Confirmed via spy shots | Spotted testing repeatedly in India and Europe |
| Name | Expected, not official | Widely reported as Bonneville 400 |
| India engine | Expected | 349cc liquid cooled single cylinder |
| Export engine | Expected | 398cc single cylinder |
| Launch window | Expected | Q4 2026, festive season, before Diwali |
| Price | Estimated | Around ₹2 lakh to ₹2.5 lakh, ex-showroom |
| Main rival | Clear | Royal Enfield Classic 350 |
With that framing in place, here is what it looks set to bring to the table.
A proper modern classic, not another roadster
This is the most differentiated model in the Triumph 400 family so far. Where the Speed 400, Scrambler 400X, Speed T4 and Thruxton 400 all share a sporty, roadster oriented stance, the Bonneville goes full retro. The spy shots reveal a teardrop shaped fuel tank that looks noticeably larger than the one on the existing 400s, a round LED headlamp, wide handlebars and a flat, single piece bench seat for a relaxed, upright riding posture.
The detailing leans heavily on old school charm: a peashooter style exhaust, chrome accents on the engine covers and grab rails, and wire spoke wheels. The instrument cluster appears to be a single pod unit, with a semi digital console the most likely setup given the rest of the 400 range.
The biggest mechanical change sits at the back. The bike uses a new subframe and revised chassis that allow for twin rear shock absorbers, replacing the monoshock seen on its siblings. That dual shock layout is exactly what a retro motorcycle of this character needs, both for the look and the period correct feel. Up front is a telescopic fork with rubber gaiters, much like the Speed T4, and disc brakes are expected at both ends with dual channel ABS as standard. Test mules have also been seen with India specific touches like a saree guard and an engine guard.
Engine: 349cc for India, 398cc for export
Here is where the Triumph Bonneville 400 gets interesting, and where buyers need to read carefully. The prototype is powered by the familiar 400 series single cylinder engine, but the displacement story differs by market.
Export versions are expected to use the 398cc single that powers the Speed 400, which in that bike makes 40 PS and 37.5 Nm. The India bound model, however, is expected to use a 349cc liquid cooled single instead. The reason is purely tax driven. After the revised GST structure came into effect in September 2025, motorcycles under 350cc attract a lower tax slab, so Bajaj and Triumph reworked the engine to slip just under the 350cc mark. Reports suggest the bike would already be on sale had this rework not been needed, pushing the launch to late 2026.
Crucially, the India specification power and torque figures have not been confirmed. The 349cc unit is expected to wear a different, more relaxed state of tune than the Speed 400, prioritising low end torque and an easy going character that suits the classic brief rather than outright performance. Do not assume the 40 PS figure for the India bike, since that belongs to the larger 398cc engine. What is near certain is that it stays liquid cooled, an edge in refinement and performance over the air cooled rivals it targets.
Triumph Bonneville 400 expected specifications
The table below collects the most likely specifications based on spy shots and the existing 400 range. Treat every figure marked expected as provisional until Triumph makes it official.
| Specification | Expected detail (India) |
|---|---|
| Engine | 349cc liquid cooled single cylinder |
| Power | Not confirmed, lower state of tune than Speed 400 |
| Torque | Not confirmed, tuned for low end response |
| Gearbox | 6 speed, expected |
| Front suspension | Telescopic fork with rubber gaiters |
| Rear suspension | Twin shock absorbers |
| Brakes | Front and rear discs |
| Safety | Dual channel ABS, expected |
| Wheels | Wire spoke |
| Headlamp | Round LED |
| Instruments | Single pod, semi digital expected |
| Seat | Flat single piece bench seat |
Price and launch: what to expect
On timing, the consensus points to a launch in the fourth quarter of 2026, most likely around the festive season and ideally before Diwali. The bike has been spied so frequently, and in such finished form, that a reveal looks imminent.
Pricing is harder to pin down, and estimates vary. Some expectations place the bike below ₹2 lakh to undercut its key rival, while others peg it closer to ₹2.4 lakh to ₹2.5 lakh, ex-showroom. A sensible expectation is a starting price somewhere in the ₹2 lakh to ₹2.5 lakh band, which would slot it right into the heart of the premium retro segment. Where it lands will decide whether it undercuts the Classic 350 or sits above it as a premium, better equipped alternative.
How it stacks up against the Royal Enfield Classic 350
The Classic 350 is the bike the Triumph Bonneville 400 is built to challenge, with the Honda CB350 H’ness as the other obvious target. Here is how the expected Triumph compares with these two confirmed rivals.
| Bike | Engine | Power | Torque | Cooling | Price (ex-showroom) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Triumph Bonneville 400 (expected) | 349cc single | Not confirmed | Not confirmed | Liquid | About ₹2 to 2.5 lakh (estimated) |
| Royal Enfield Classic 350 | 349cc single | 20.2 PS | 27 Nm | Air and oil | ₹1.86 to 2.21 lakh |
| Honda CB350 H’ness | 348.4cc single | 21.07 PS | 30 Nm | Air | From about ₹1.93 lakh |
On paper, the Triumph’s liquid cooled engine should give it a clear refinement and performance advantage over the air cooled Classic 350 and CB350, especially on the highway. The Royal Enfield, though, counters with unmatched brand pull in this space, a vast dealer and service network, and a price that is hard to beat. Other rivals worth noting include the Royal Enfield Bullet 350, the Jawa 350 and the Harley-Davidson X440, which is also built in partnership with Bajaj.
Why the Triumph Bonneville 400 matters
For years, the Triumph 400 range has been excellent but pointed at the sporty roadster buyer. The Triumph Bonneville 400 is the first time the Bajaj and Triumph alliance is going after the emotional, heritage led heart of the Indian market, the exact territory Royal Enfield has owned for decades.
The appeal is straightforward: a globally respected British badge, genuinely classic styling with twin shocks and a bench seat, and a modern liquid cooled engine smoother than the air cooled thumpers it rivals, potentially at a price close to a Classic 350. For a rider who loves the retro look but wants modern engineering underneath, that is tempting.
The honest caveats remain. Nothing about the engine output, features, equipment or price is confirmed, the name itself is unofficial, and a final launch date is still awaited. Anyone planning to buy should treat the current picture as a strong preview, not a spec sheet, and wait for Triumph’s official reveal before drawing firm conclusions.
Quick Pros and Cons
| Likely Pros | Likely Cons |
|---|---|
| Authentic modern classic styling with twin shocks and bench seat | Name, specs and price all still unofficial |
| Liquid cooled engine, more refined than air cooled rivals | India 349cc power figures not yet confirmed |
| Trusted Triumph badge with global heritage | Smaller dealer network than Royal Enfield |
| Expected dual channel ABS and disc brakes at both ends | Launch only expected late 2026, not on sale yet |
| Could be priced close to the Royal Enfield Classic 350 | Premium pricing risk if it lands near ₹2.5 lakh |
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is the Triumph Bonneville 400 officially confirmed? No. The bike has been spied testing in India and Europe several times, but Triumph has not officially revealed it. The name, specifications, features, price and launch date are all expectations based on spy shots, not confirmed facts.
2. When will the Bonneville 400 launch in India? It is expected to launch in the fourth quarter of 2026, most likely around the festive season and possibly before Diwali, though Triumph has not announced an exact date.
3. What engine will the Bonneville 400 use? Export models are expected to use a 398cc single cylinder engine, while the India version is expected to use a 349cc liquid cooled single, reworked to stay under 350cc for the lower GST slab. The exact India power and torque figures are not confirmed.
4. How much will the Triumph Bonneville 400 cost? Estimates vary from below ₹2 lakh to around ₹2.5 lakh, ex-showroom. A starting price in the ₹2 lakh to ₹2.5 lakh range is a reasonable expectation, but Triumph has not confirmed pricing.
5. Which bikes will the Bonneville 400 rival? Its primary rival is the Royal Enfield Classic 350, with the Honda CB350 H’ness, Royal Enfield Bullet 350, Jawa 350 and Harley-Davidson X440 as other competitors in the retro segment.
6. How is it different from the Triumph Speed 400? The Speed 400 is a sporty roadster with a monoshock. The Bonneville is a modern classic with a revised chassis, twin rear shocks, a teardrop tank, a bench seat and wire spoke wheels, giving it a far more traditional retro character.
7. Will the Bonneville 400 get ABS? Dual channel ABS is expected as standard, along with disc brakes at both ends, in line with the rest of the Triumph 400 range, though this is yet to be officially confirmed.
Motors77 Verdict
The Triumph Bonneville 400 is shaping up to be one of the most significant retro motorcycle launches in India for 2026. By pairing genuine Bonneville styling, twin shocks and a flat bench seat with a modern liquid cooled engine, Bajaj and Triumph are finally taking direct aim at the emotional core of the market that Royal Enfield has long dominated.
What excites us is the combination on offer. A respected British badge, proper classic looks and the refinement of liquid cooling could make this the most credible alternative to the Classic 350 yet, particularly if the pricing stays sharp. The shift to twin rear shocks and a bench seat shows Triumph understands that this segment is bought with the heart, not the spec sheet.
What we will not do is pretend we know more than we do. The India engine output, the feature list, the equipment levels and the final price are all unconfirmed, the name is still unofficial, and the launch is only expected, not dated. The picture from the spy shots is genuinely promising, but it is a preview, not a brochure.
If you are in the market for a premium retro motorcycle and can wait, the Triumph Bonneville 400 is absolutely worth holding out for before you sign on a Classic 350 or CB350. Just go in with realistic expectations and wait for Triumph’s official numbers. On current evidence, this could be the bike that finally gives the Royal Enfield Classic 350 a serious, heritage rich fight.







